Arrow Video: King of New York (1990) - Reviewed

Courtesy of Arrow Films
Bronx based provocateur Abel Ferrara, already having achieved notoriety in the video nasties with The Driller Killer followed by his collaboration with Zoe Lund in the rape-revenge epic Ms. 45, was peaking at the start of the 1990s.  Having just completed his heist film Cat Chaser in 1989, the indie-at-heart director’s next project was his most ambitious undertaking at the time: a New York based neo-noir crime saga starring Christopher Walken in the titular role of the King of New York. 

 
Starring a sizzling ensemble cast including but not limited to Laurence Fishburne, David Caruso, Wesley Snipes, Giancarlo Esposito, Scorsese regular Victor Argo and even Steve Buscemi, the film penned by frequent Ferrara collaborator Nicolas St. John is an unexpected mixture of Ferrara’s penchant for violence and debauchery while also serving up a postmodern reworking of the legend of Robin Hood (believe it or not).
 
Drug lord Frank White (Walken) recently released from prison and back on his turf in the streets of New York, fancies himself as the city’s new crossbreed between Robin Hood and Tony Montana, a violent wrongdoer trying to use his muscle to give back to the community including funneling money to save a hospital from oblivion.  To do this, his enforcers led by gangster Jimmy (Laurence Fishburne) sweep the city turf by turf from other mobsters, ruthlessly gunning down opponents while fending off a band of crooked cops (Victor Argo, David Caruso and Wesley Snipes) determined to take Frank down even if it means breaking the law themselves.  All of this plays out across the cocaine underworld empire which leaves ample room for Walken to chew up the scenery as the coked-up Frank White.

 
A brutally violent, crude and often depraved crime epic that feels genuinely sleazy and dirty thanks to Ferrara’s trademark gritty aesthetic though fans of the director will begin noticing a finer polish on this one than what came previously.  Lensed beautifully by Bojan Bazelli who also shot Ferrara’s Body Snatchers as well as Gore Verbinski’s A Cure for Wellness and aided by a pulsating score by Ferrara disciple Joe Delia who scored every one of the director’s films, King of New York now remastered in 4K UHD by Arrow Video looks and sounds stunning, probably the best a Ferrara product has ever looked on home video.  In addition to the score is a cavalcade of hip-hop R&B tracks which perfectly compliments the urban criminal underworld lived in by Frank and his cronies.
 
Partially an action picture, partially a distinctly New York based character study that is as much about the kingpins as it is about the personality and weather of the city itself, Abel Ferrara’s King of New York second to Body Snatchers is the director’s most straightforward film.  A hard-boiled crime drama, a swan dive into depravity, a limb for Christopher Walken to jump off of, King of New York opened to poor reviews and dismal box office returns but as with most of Ferrara’s work found a second life on home video before being reappraised as a modern classic of neo-noir.  As always with Ferrara, all of the debaucheries are framed within the context of a morally conflicted evil man trying with what life and power he has left to live to make some measure of change for the better, even if it means gunning down a few people along the way. 

 
Seen now, the film is mostly a showcase for the ensemble cast to give go-for-broke over-the-top performances that in another movie would threaten to derail the picture but here only serves to enhance its dangerousness.  In Ferrara’s pantheon it doesn’t quite have the punch Bad Lieutenant or, many years later, Welcome to New York.  But it is nevertheless a deliriously entertaining Ferrara effort that capitalizes on everything fans of his came to expect from his ‘90s output: sex, drugs, violence, grit and impassioned over-the-top acting that feels oddly appropriate for Ferrara’s universe.  A one-of-a-kind crime saga from a still controversial and divisive but brilliant cinematic artist.

--Andrew Kotwicki